Showing posts with label Houston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Houston. Show all posts

Friday, February 22, 2013

Update on Houston-Chiba exchange program, among others


Though I passed on my involvement with the Houston-Chiba Sister City Committee (with Sister Cities of Houston) and the board of Japan-America Society of Houston (JASH) at the close of 2012, last year's chaperone, Japanese teacher Mrs. Fang Ji of Johnston Middle School, did a couple write-ups about the JMS students two-week trip.  Since the HISD link might expire, I'll take the liberty of reproducing the text as well.  I never really got any pictures from last year's trip, or else I would share some.

Texas Foreign Language Association Journal, Spring 2013

HISD Community News:

Johnston MS student ambassadors receive commendations from city

On Dec. 6, four students from Johnston Middle School received commendations as from the City of Houston for their service to the Bayou City.
Isabel MacDonough, Ariel Miranda, Hannah Reeves, and Ethan Yang, who are learning Japanese, served as student ambassadors to our sister city in Chiba, Japan, a city northeast of Tokyo. They spent two weeks there in June 2012 with host families, touring the schools, as well as the sites of Chiba City and Tokyo.
They were chaperoned by their Japanese language teacher at Johnston, Fang Ji.
Johnston MS has participated in this exchange program for five years and has offered Japanese language classes for more than 15 years. It also hosts four middle-school students from Chiba every other summer.
The students are pictured with Japan America Society of Houston President Gary Nakamura (far left), City Council member Jack Christie (center, who appeared on the mayor’s behalf), and Johnston alumnus and exchange program committee member Daniel Morgan (far right), who served as a chaperone during the summer of 2010.



Not exactly news since it was last December, but recently I was informed that Johnston Middle School has decided to close down their Japanese/Chinese program.  Bummer.  Well, it was a good run.  I worked with the SCH/JASH/HCSCC program from 2009-12.  I look forward to the new ideas and fresh spirit that the next committee chair brings to the program with the next lucky Houston middle school. 

Oh, by the way, my friend Miyuki Kobayashi is bringing in not one, but two, batches of high school and college students from Tokyo this year with her own JAMSRY program.  Just in time for the rodeo.  Can't wait to meet their smiling faces.  It's so rewarding to get to share the joy of hospitality with new friends.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Houston homes with a slight Asian accent

Here's a post without a home.  I guess I'll just stick it here.

Sometimes when cruising through a neighborhood I will chance upon some oriental-inspired architecture or randscaping - ah, I mean, landscaping.  I don't imagine other people care all that much, but I find it different and appealing, especially as I jot down ideas and sketches for something that I would like to see designed someday for myself if I had a tub of money.  Maybe you'll find these refreshing as well.

If you had any others to add, drop me a line.  I don't know much about architecture, so feel free to correct me.

Houston certainly has some gorgeous homes, that is, some ridiculously massive mansions/palaces which I idly wish the people who own them might invite me inside someday.  These are not them.

Bunker Hill Village, I think on Bayou Glen Rd.
 
I'm not entirely sure if this was even consciously meant to be Asian in style.  I think the steps take away from the effect, which should be as smooth and relaxing as possible.  Also, maybe if the eaves were curved a bit, like the upturned point on elf shoes.


All in all, this is probably the best of the lot.  It's downhill from here.


The Japanese Supplementary School hosted at Westchester Academy.

This garden(?) is actually quite ugly, especially compared to what it could be.  I wonder if it was an Eagle scout project or something.  The torii strikes me as particularly fragile-looking.


Over by Montrose and UST.
A metal security gate inside of the inviting torii - kind of a contradiction in terms if you ask me.  Probably some pot-smoking Buddhist-wannabes judging by the stone pagodas/stupas. 


S. Braeswood near Buffalo Speedway or so.
A beautiful little bridge in a tiny little yard that goes nowhere.  Well, at least the willow tree and such help accentuate it.  Theoretically there is a place for some water beneath it for a ripply pool.  And the view across the street is of Braes Bayou, which could also use a facelift.


Near W. Bellfort and Chimney Rock.
A bridge for Hobbits?  Hobbits who use ADT Security apparently.


Off of Nairn St. by the Brae Burn Country Club.
Simple and austere, though a bit threadbare.  Maybe it's a Zen monastery by night.  Could use a dwarf cypress or bamboo or one of those curvy, gnarly, ornamental juniper shrubs in the lawn.  I love ornamental juniper.  Or a pond with koi and a footbridge and a little hedge enclosure to one side.  Why not?

Stella Link, south of 610.
Not a residence, but a trophy store.  The owner told me it used to be a Chinese restaurant a long time ago.  Went on about the still beam structure (steel?) supporting the place, but I didn't really understand.  Anyway, nice digs.  Would make a cool dojo.

P.S. - If you ever wondered what Shinto gates have to do with Texas and the American West, look no further.

Add another cross-beam and you're almost there.


 Wonder if I should call them up and claim to be a long-lost cousin?

Monday, October 8, 2012

二十八回 アドナイ・エレ修養会

This weekend was the 28th Annual Texas and Oklahoma Japanese Christian Retreat.  That's not the official name, but it's a good description, if a tad long.  This year it was at Latham Springs, near Aquilla, TX, which is around the corner from Waco.  

To be honest, I wasn't really looking forward to a nearly four hour drive to the middle of Texas, especially after driving to Amarillo and back last month (twenty hours).  Also, when my friend invited me, I wasn't all that keen to go considering how poor my Japanese is and that other glaring fact that I'm not Japanese.  And I would only know like two people there.  (Unfortunately, of the forty-some Japanese Christians I know of in Houston, only four of us made it out there to represent.  Actually, three, if you don't count me.)

Still, I figured it might be a good chance to get to meet some Japanese who were fellow Texans as well as brothers and sisters in Christ.  I also would find out that this would probably be Pastor Takarada's last time since he plans to move on from Japanese Baptist Church of North Texas.



Brrr.  Pretty chilly and overcast.



I stayed in a dorm room with eight other guys, but no one was in this place at the end
of the road to tell me to get off the deck.
I didn't make the Friday evening part since my friend advised against trying to find the place along back country roads in the dark, so I drove up early Saturday morning.  Like 3:30 a.m.  When I poked my head out of the car around sunrise, I was shocked to find that a cold front had come in and it was a good thirty degrees cooler than it had been in Houston.  Needless to say, I didn't anticipate the need to pack a hoodie or jacket or Japanese カイロ hand-warmers.  (Late Saturday night, some of the folks made a camp fire with s'mores, but I turned in before that.  Must be getting old.)

The fellowship was wonderful.  There was a cozy level of familiarity even among strangers.  Of course, there were fun times like finding out we knew people in common or had visited someone's hometown before in Japan.  It's just a shame most of them live so far away - sweet, dear people that I would begin to miss as soon as we had cleared away the tables and chairs from lunch on Sunday and packed up to go.

 

The trails skirting the retreat ground were pretty nice and came near to touching the Brazos River at a few points.  I also saw some turkeys a couple times, but never could get a clear picture before they scuttled off.

There was plenty of singing, teaching messages, testimonies, small group prayer, and even a talent show including everything from a juggler to comedy to a skit of Joshua and the Battle of Jericho to an obaachan-style Jewish dance.  One of my favorite moments would have to be when Pastor Kroeger's wife, who is nearly blind, was gently led up to the stage and, in the most heavenly voice, sang songs like "Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus." 

Marching around with the Ark (omikoshi?)

Rather spry and にぎや


So a taste of Japan, some new friends, and a bit of nature to boot.  All in all, a memorable weekend.  Next year will be hosted in San Antonio.  If I'm Stateside then, I hope to see you there too.  Gotta start planning for what we'll do for the talent show.  I'm thinking manzai


Saturday, September 15, 2012

Discovering the Beauty of Houston

Recently a Japanese acquaintance asked me for recommendations around town for her friend who has visiting for a day or two. Since I had been planning to eventually write a post on this, I had something I could send off to her pretty quickly and told her about Houston Greeters.  Of course, I never got around to actually posting something until now, but at least in this version you'll get some pretty pictures to go with it.  Feel free to e-mail me as well about any thoughts on visiting places around town.

I should say, first off, that there are tons of good write-ups on the Internet on this already, so feel free to check around, talk to some other Houstonians, and compare it to this so you can rest assured that I'm right.  You'll be sure to make some friends in the process too.  Despite being the fourth largest city in America, most folk still nod their heads and give a hello when you’re walking down the street and have the common courtesy to open the door for you.  Lack of mountains and cool weather aside, there’s plenty about Houston I miss when I’m away.  Take it for what it is.  This is nostalgia for those who would be nostalgic for Houston.

In general, you can get some basic tourist info and a calendar of events from sites like Visit Houston Texas and find out, for instance:

Houston Zoo: free the first Tuesday of the month after 2 p.m.
Museum of Fine Arts: free Thursday 10 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Museum of Natural Science: free Thursday after 2 p.m.  (3-6 permanent exhibits)
Children's Museum: free Thursday 5-8 p.m.

Although that Children's Museum is going to be crazy crowded at that time.

Some so-so audio tours here.

First, a couple disclaimers:

Shopping... I'm a guy so I don't know too well, but I hear Asian ladies talking about outlet malls around town that are inexpensive, like Premium Outlets on 290 or Katy Mills on I-10.  Of course, there are tons of regular malls around town, but for name recognition the Galleria is still one of the most famous places to go.  Some other malls have nicer or larger ice skating rings inside, but the Galleria's location on Westheimer Road offers a quintessential Houston experience.

NASA is typical, but not really all that special, unless maybe it's the "hush-hush" Level 9 Tour.  You or your tourist friend might still want to check it out simply because it is "the thing to do", but I wouldn't have very high expectations.  You might as well try to incorporate some other local places such as Galveston or Kema (the poor man's Galveston) or Bayou Wildlife Park to make the trip worth the while.  More on those later.

There's Japanese astronaut Norishige "Nemo" Kanai

Some things like the sports teams, our port (busiest in U.S. with foreign tonnage), the Texas Medical Center (the largest and best in the world), the oil and gas sector (energy capital of the world), or our Theater District with all its various performances means little to me since watching sports or going to operas or getting a questionable tumor removed is not my cup of tea.  I'll stick to what I know.

First here's my overview of things categorized by place (buildings/areas), food, and parks, with the top 7 list to follow.

Places:

-Transco Tower and Waterwall; Galleria area; Lakes on Post Oak.
Now called the Williams Tower, but many native Houstonians still cherish it by its old name.  At 64 stories, this neo-Deco masterpiece stands as one of the most iconic images of Houston, second perhaps only to the Astrodome (which has been out of use for years and will probably be torn down eventually).  Houston may be flat as all get out, but the redeeming grace is that tall buildings, especially lone citadels like the Transco with its beacon, can be seen for miles out.


"The Lakes" just south of the Galleria and Waterwall has a lovely little park with ponds with the Transco as a backdrop.  I couldn't find any photos in my files, but rather than drive ten minutes to take some, here's one from Google Earth.  The blue in front of the Transco is the water.




Update: At the end of 2012 I noticed that the Lakes have been paved over and a building has been constructed on top.  Could have seen that coming. Er, moving on...

-Charles Fondow’s "Wichita Mystery House"
From over the rooftops, one catches a peek of... a turret?  Something grips you and you find yourself lured into the neighborhood to encounter one of the most fantastical finds around town.  You can't go inside this Amityville-style haunt, but then again you might not make it out again if you did.  Just kidding.  Still, it's fun to wonder if inside Edward Scissorhands might be watching you.

Do not attempt to retrieve any balls that accidentally go over the fence.

-St. Paul’s United Methodist Church
The architect that designed the Gulf Building, the San Jacinto Monument, and several other of Houston’s treasured edifices also bequeathed us this Gothic masterpiece in the heart of the museum district.  St. Martin's Episcopal might be grander, like its European cathedral counterparts, but its ugly orange brick face can't compare to good ol' slate and limestone.  Don't know why, but St. Paul's has an altar and chancel and all the rest, so I guess that means they're still Catholic/Judaizers in their soteriology.


At nightfall the gargoyles take flight to patrol the city.

It's said Bruce Wayne parents are buried here.



-Half-Price Books or the shops at Rice Village in general.
It's not particular to Houston, since HPB is around the country, but Half-Price is far more than just books.  You can find new and used movies, music, comics, etc. for next to nothing.  They've got like almost a dozen locations around town now.  There are all kinds of coffee bars and cafes around the Village location.  What I missed most in Japan besides Southern hospitality and hugs was Half-Price Books, Blue Bell ice cream, and heaping portions of Mexican food.  Speaking of which...

Food:

Take your pick.  Houston has more restaurants than any other city in America.  Tex-Mex or Mexican food would be a list unto itself, and of course there are many such on the Internet.  I’m not a foodie or any kind of connoisseur, but for starters I recommend El Ranchero, Guadalajara, Ninfas, Pico's, Spanish Village, Escalante's, Chacho’s, etc.


-House of Pies.  Open 24 hours a day.  Great pies.  Brings back good memories from college days.

-It seems to come up a lot, the closing of cool places here.  Well, Vargo's, that renowned restaurant amid nine acres of meandering garden with peacocks and a lake with its own bridge and swans, closed this year.  Maybe it's karma, but a few weeks later the Pleasure Pier in Galveston opened. I wonder what they can do to take the place of the Forbidden Gardens in Katy.

-BBQ and steakhouses like Goode Co., Saltgrass, Texas Land and Cattle, Taste of Texas.  If you go to the Kirby location for Goode Co. they have a giant statue of a Longhorn Armadillo.  At the I-10 location with its classy country exterior, there's a Carter's Country next door when you can gaze at the guns and stock up on your ammo like a good Texian.  At Saltgrass, enjoy free Texas-brewed Shiner Bock beer-battered bread before the meal.  If that doesn't sound like heaven...

-Blue Bell ice cream.  The creamery at Brenham, surrounded in a sea of bluebonnets in early Spring is like a pilgrimage.  Be sure to get a picture of the infamous roadside signs "Don't Mess With Texas."  You ain't just whistlin' Dixie, brother.

Kinda just brings out a little manly eye-sweat...

Parks:

-Spotts Park and Buffalo Bayou Walk offer a great view of the downtown skyline and a nightly vantage point to see the hundreds of thousands of bats emerging from Waugh Bridge.

-Terry Hershey Park with its undulating trails is also nice and probably my favorite pick.  It feels much more removed and enclosed as it follows the bayou than the other green spaces.


-Hermann Park in the center of it all is enjoyable enough and with its lovely little hill to break up the flat monotony of the Houston landscape.  It also boasts McGovern Lake, a somewhat decent Japanese Garden, free summer shows at Miller Outdoor Theatre, and the nearby zoo.  To be honest, without the zoo, HMNS, golf course, and parking lots, there are only maybe 30 acres there.  The Japanese Garden takes up five acres.  The big cities in Texas have similar Japanese Gardens, but it looks to me like the one in Fort Worth is the best.  Also, it's a little bigger (seven acres out of a larger botanical garden of 109).

-Memorial Park has some great bike trails, but is otherwise bland in my opinion.  If you're going to have that much space (1,500 acres), at least throw in some piles of dirt and make some earthworks.  If you're into it, of course, they have facilities for different sports.  And the Arboretum is right there.

-I wasn't going to include Bear Creek Park since I didn't find it all that compelling when I've been there before, but I hear they have a zoo so I'm giving it the benefit of the doubt.

-At 7,800 acres, George Bush Park is plenty massive enough, but even more bland.  However, if you can get off the beaten path, which happens to be a paved road that runs in a straight line forever, there are some rewarding sights among the woods and swamps.   





-Brazos Bend State Park is okay, but past the outskirts of town, it might be a little far for some.  Still, it's the best place to see some gators and there's always the George Observatory on the weekends.  And while you're down there on a Saturday, you might as well stop by George Ranch for an authentic experience back in time to cowboy and pioneer days.


-Sesquicentennial Park, Downtown.  I mention this primarily for the mysterious, unmarked red button at Preston Street Bridge near to the Wortham Center.  Does it hold some sinister purpose?  Would the whole island sink if it were pressed?  No ones knows...  Okay, not really.  But it's sure fun to find out what strange thing it stirs up in the water.  Highly recommended is if some kayakers happen to be passing by when you press it.

Other fringe places:

-East of Houston there's the Battleship Texas & San Jacinto Monument.  The San Jacinto Monument (the world's tallest monumental column; taller than the Washington Monument).  Go on April 21st and you'll get to see a nifty historical reenactment which I documented a bit in an earlier post in April.  Across the way is the Battleship Texas (USS Texas), the oldest dreadnought battleship.  She served in both World Wars, firing the first American shots of World War I, and was one-time flagship of the United States Fleet.  45 minutes away.

-If you happen to be heading a bit north of Houston (or coming back), don't forget the giant 67-foot-tall Sam Houston statue greeting you by the side of the highway just south of Huntsville also has its own visitor's center.  Nice photo op ("Everything's Bigger in Texas").  1 hour 15 minutes out.  He left his boots in San Antonio though.

Now then, if you want to extend your mileage a bit, Galveston is the closest beach and despite its sometime rivalry with Houston, it's the best day trip around.  At one time it was the second richest city in America.  See the historic Strand district with its old ice cream parlor-style Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory and pose in cowboy garb at Way Out West Old Time Photos.  A few blocks away is the tall ship Elissa, Bishop’s Palace, Moody Mansion, Moody Gardens, the Grand 1894 Opera House, and so on.  You can cruise for free the ferry and spot the porpoises, or float the day by at Schlitterbahn Water Park.  In the winter, there's plenty of color and goblets of fun with Dickens on the Strand.  In Springtime, Mardi Gras.  1 hour southeast.

Like Boardwalk Empire but without Steve Buscemi.

Actually, I'd really like to stroll the new, oddly-named Historic Pleasure Pier, laid out with three football fields worth of rides, carnival games, and concession stands.  Nice to finally see something replace Six Flags Astroworld.  I guess it's meant to be the James Coney Island of the Gulf.  I hope they have The Human Lobster, Madame Fortuna, and Jimmy the Dog-Faced Boy.

Finally, there are the seasonal attractions like the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo (the largest in the world), the Japan Festival (voted Best Festival in Houston by Houston Press), Renaissance Festival, and other mainstays that I've covered previously with pictures on this blog.

My Top 7 Awesome Things To Enjoy In And Around Houston

7. The Strand, Galveston.  No, it’s not in Houston proper, so I’m already cheating a bit (until our city limits finally expand out and swallow it one day).  The historic buildings here capped by the Art Deco-style Railroad Museum, trolley, horse and carriage rides, etc. get major points since Houston is all too prone to demolish its older architectural treasures.

6. Blue Bell ice cream.  You already know why from description above about the scenic countryside and small town charm surrounding the creamery, and as a sidebar I think Promised Land Milk merits an honorable mention.  It's a Texas original, which started out as an ice cream dairy.  They also make an Egg Nog flavor, which might sound redundant since it’s already so rich and creamy, but they offer an Easter Egg Nog flavor so you don’t have to wait a whole year til Christmas. 

5. Half-Price Books.  No surprise there.  But they do need reading areas, like parlors with chairs and Tiffany lamps and tumblers.

4. St. Paul’s United Methodist Church.  Already mentioned its exterior charm.  Also, plenty of museums within walking distance.  I've not been inside, but I can make an educated guess that their doctrine is full of fruit loops.  For "spiritual" sites, most people list the gloomy Rothko Chapel, but I must say I detest that place in every possible way.

3. Transco Tower.  I just feel better seeing its familiar beacon from afar, kind of like sighting the old Imperial Sugar Factory in Sugarland (now demolished).  The only way it could be better is if they would expand the park and re-open the observation deck like it was before 9/11.

2. Spotts Park and Buffalo Bayou Walk.  Did I mention the semblance of a change in elevation?  As a public space, I just wish they would try to have more active edges to it, with sidewalk cafes and the like.

1. To be honest, for me, my favorite spot to meander around is the boondocks of my boyhood behind my neighborhood.  It's a huge area near South Main and South Post Oak, about a half mile in length and a fifth of a mile in width, bounded on both sides by the railroad tracks - the freight trains wail in a lonesome way at night.  And even though that's just outside the 610 Loop, it's like bordering on the edge of the wild wood.

Or was.  Much of the woods have been cleared, clear-cut I should say, to make way for some Willow Waterhole Park or Tama Hills* or something that may never come.  They want to flood most of the area with water as a "stormwater detention basin" to help manage flooding.  To me, it's a terrible loss.  Now one can see all the way to the other side, a bunch of industrial warehouses.  Tons of noise pollution from Highway 90 too.  Everything's much smaller than it was when I was twelve.

*Yes, a "Pom Poko" reference.  Someone should make a Studio Ghibli feature on the destruction of my boondocks.

I've seen fawn near Meyer Park when I was in middle school (back when there was a small "Meyer Forest"), and of course we have the standard opossum and raccoons.  Cranes are a common sight.  A neighbor once told me she saw a bobcat out there around dawn and there have been lots of sightings of coyote around this part of town recently, so perhaps they hang out here from time to time.  Used to be snakes back there when it was wooded. 






But I guess most people will never have a chance to see that area.  Therefore, I think I have to give the nod to Rice University for its gorgeous Old World grace and immensely satisfying Fondren Library.

Although it is just a coincidence that the university was started by a guy with the last name of "Rice", Houston has a lot of its origin in rice farming (thanks, Saibara-san) before oil was struck.  Rice University, with its Byzantine towers and arcades and archways and cloisters and Hogwarts-esque doors, still has its foundations in the swampy marshlands of the past.  


Well, how about you?  Got a favorite on your list you like to share with visitors?


P.S. - You know, I feel a little bad about cheating on the whole Galveston thing.  Tell you what.  I'll balance things out by including a great getaway near Austin, Hamilton Pool.

Photo by Brent Schneeman
You know, if you happen to like 50-foot waterfalls cascading like unicorn milk into emerald leprechaun dreams.  As far as swimming holes go, it's rather photogenic.  And if I ever have a chance to go myself, I'll paste my own photos for your viewing pleasure instead of resorting to accredited links of other people pics.




Saturday, July 14, 2012

Houston-Chiba Sister City 30th Annual Student Exchange Trip

[It's true I was somewhat slack in posting something when the four Houston middle school kids went to Chiba this summer.  For one thing, I was waiting to receive some good pictures before doing a write-up.  Time passed.  Oh, well.  So, I'm writing this from the future (October '12); if I get some pics, I'll add them later.  Or my future self will.]


You heard right.  This year is the 30th Anniversary since the exchange started back in 1983.  I know the math might seem weird.  'Cause I was born in '82 and I'm thirty now...  Maybe they had two exchanges at once or somebody jumped the gun.

Incidentally, this year also makes the 40th Anniversary of the sister city relationship.  No fuzzy math there - it started in 1972.  So, big news, yeah!  Unfortunately, no, there won't really be any headline celebrations that I know of due some various factors that I can't really talk about that much, other than the fact that Japanese in Houston tend to be way too political about every little thing and party poopers in general.

By the way, it's also the 100th Anniversary since the Japanese donated the cherry blossom trees (sakura) to Washington, D.C.  Houston will be celebrating that Sakura Gifting on October 19th in the Japanese Garden in Hermann Park with Mayor Parker and other official folk.  Don't think I'm invited to that one, so I guess that excuses me from reporting on it.

From what I read of the students reports, they had a great time with their host families.  They got to meet Mayor Kumagai of Chiba, the Board of Education, went on a tour of Minami Boso, and on their overnight trip visited the coastal resort of Shirahama.  Since I was chaperone two years ago, I know firsthand how well-prepared the schedule is.  Chiba City International Association (CCIA) does a superb job.

Izumiya Junior High School website's itinerary with the Houston kids.





















At school they were offered various culture activities like karate, calligraphy lessons, koto, and judo.  A far cry from my middle school days.  I didn't learn an instrument growing up; the only cultural activities I had to choose from were electives like Newspaper Club and Auto Shop class.

I'll leave you with the words of one of our exchange students, "I loved Japan - no one word could ever describe how much I had fun and learned."

With last year's Japanese exchange students in Asakusa

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

VBS 2012 - Summer Classes for Kids

Hey international families~

Looking for cheap/free, last-minute summer camps to send your kids to?  Searching the Internet for terms like “Houston summer camps”, “English lessons”, and “get them out of the house and out of my hair before they drive me up the walls insane”?

Well, unfortunately I can't offer a Japanese VBS like I could last year (it's tough doing it all by my lonesome - unless someone out there actually wanted to help me with it), but there are tons of week-long, half-day VBS (Vacation Bible School) locations offered by local churches.  Don't worry, it's not scary religious propaganda or anything.  Kids love it.  It's not really like school, but more with games and songs and arts & crafts and interesting stories.  I did it when I was a kid.  Many Americans do.

What I wish was available were more ESL classes for international adults for that week.  I only know of Rice Temple Baptist offering such (actually I'll be helping out there, teaching one of the English slots and maybe a Bible class the following week).

There are so many locations out there, it's too much to keep track of them all.  I can't recommend every church, of course, but there's several good ones that I know better and I'd be happy to answer any questions you might have.  Otherwise, please call the church about any questions before you register.  For now, here's five.  If you want to, I guess you could even sign up for several different VBS locations since some are on different weeks. Several are using the same "Amazing Wonders" vintage 1920s aviation theme wherein the kids virtually travel to different locations around the globe learning about the power of God.  Wish I was still a kid.



Medical Center area:

June 4-8, 9:00 a.m. – noon
Rice Temple Baptist also offers their regular adult ESL classes at the same time all that week.
9-10 Bible classes, 10-11 English classes, and 11-12 music classes.

June 4-8, 9:00 a.m. – noon
Ditto with West University Baptist.  But please call or register for their time schedule.

On the west side of town, closer to Memorial City Mall or Katy:

June 11-15, 9:00 a.m. – noon
Check out the friendly folks at Tallowood.

June 25-29, 9:00 a.m. – noon
Likewise, with Bridgepoint.  You might remember this is where we had our Japanese VBS hosted last year.

July 9-12, 9:00 a.m. – noon, ends with a Family Fun Night on Thursday, July 12th from 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Second Baptist Church, Katy Campus.

Monday, March 26, 2012

As if you didn't know, Japan Festival this weekend!

For all of you in the greater Houston area, don't forget to mark your calendars for this weekend: March 31st-April 1st, 11AM-5PM, is our annual Japan Festival in Hermann Park.  Admission is free.  Parking can be a challenge.  I think last year there were around 25,000 people there.  I usually just park in the neighborhood a few blocks to the north - no big deal.  As usual, I'm on volunteer duty so as a bonus you can try to spot me and say hi.  Just don't ask me why we allow steampunk cosplayers, 'cause I haven't a clue.

Our new Executive Director was interviewed about it recently:



For additional info, see: Japan Fest 

In the meantime, enjoy some pics...

Kids are too cute - at least the ones I know.
Notice the elegant juxtaposition of exotic Oriental charm and Western, ah, rotundity.



World record tameshigiri - 2009, I think.